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أكثر المواضيع قراءة
الإعلان في سيريانيوز
الإتصال بنا
Road to Damascus
English

On a week-long visit to Syria - during which I explored the Old City of Damascus, the Silk Road bazaars of Aleppo and the ruins of ancient Palmyra - welcomes seemed to erupt from every quarter. No matter where I was in this ancient nation with its Bronze Age, Classical, Biblical and Islamic history, and whoever I encountered, local greetings were never long in coming.


Though most westerners might be wary of staying in a country whose authoritarian government stands accused of some serious charges - financing Hezbollah, allowing foreign fighters into neighbouring Iraq and assassinating the former Lebanese prime minister, Rafik Hariri - a week among the regular citizens of Syria and seeing the country's cultural riches is an eye-opening experience.

 

When I boarded the plane, I knew only that Damascus claimed to be the oldest inhabited city on earth and that some favourite writers - Mark Twain, Gustave Flaubert, Agatha Christie - had been swept away by the country's lore-filled past and landscapes.

 

Many people told me vaguely to be careful, though none had ever been to Syria. My few acquaintances who had braved the country despite its reputation assured me that all would be fine. Head immediately to the legendary Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, they said. Fill up whenever you can on excellent grilled lamb, baba ghanouj and pomegranate juice. And leave your preconceptions at passport control.

 

The country I discovered, in addition to being friendly and largely free of crime and related hassles, even showed glimmers of opening to the West after decades of closure. Under its London-educated, 41-year-old president, Bashar al-Assad, Syria has instituted private banking, removed a number of long-standing import barriers and passed measures allowing foreigners to own property. A Four Seasons Hotel opened in Damascus with great fanfare in 2005; a five-star Inter-Continental is under construction.

 

"Go back as far as you will into the vague past, there was always a Damascus," wrote Twain, who visited the city in the 1860s. "To Damascus, years are only flitting trifles of time. She measures time not by days and months and years, but by the empires she has seen rise and crumble to ruin. She is a type of immortality."

 

He was scarcely embellishing. The Babylonians blasted through Syria under Nebuchadnezzar, before the Persians did likewise under Darius and Xerxes. The Romans captured the country in 63BC, and Mark Antony campaigned there against the Parthians.

 

It was on the road to Damascus, most famously, that the Jewish traveller Saul was blinded by the light, initiating his conversion to Christianity and a new identity as the apostle Paul.

 

And it was on the road to Damascus, six centuries later, that the Prophet Muhammad stopped in his tracks and refused to enter the city, saying that "man should only enter paradise once". In succeeding centuries, the Egyptians, Ottomans and French all took their turns as occupiers, before Syria became independent in 1946.

 

Today, the route to the inner sanctum of the eighth-century Umayyad Mosque - the spiritual and historical heart of the Old City - seems culled from some time-worn star map. First you cross under the Roman archway, just south of the tomb of the fabled Islamic warrior Saladin, who fought Richard the Lionheart during the Crusades. Then you enter the vast gates of the mosque, whose stony expanses rest atop a former Byzantine church, which overlays a mostly vanished Roman temple to Jupiter, itself erected on the site of a former Aramaean shrine. Finally, you make a quick jog across the courtyard, past the mausoleum of John the Baptist and into the tomb of Hussein, a grandson of Muhammad and a martyr venerated by Shiite Muslims.

 

The afternoon I visited, the stone room echoed with clicking prayer beads, muttered verses from the Koran and sobs. Men prostrated themselves, pressing their foreheads to the stone. Student-aged girls and toothless, wizened old women in black veils wept openly. One bespectacled young woman cried uncontrollably, grabbing at the walls.

 

Places of powerful faith fill every corner of Damascus. In a small, silent street in the Christian Quarter of the Old City I tracked down the Church of Ananias, the man who cured St Paul of his blindness and baptised him into Christianity. Though empty of worshippers, some handwritten notes and trinkets from visitors were stuck between the stones.

 

Utterly different again, and equally haunting, was the reconstructed ancient Jewish synagogue in the National Museum, an evocative time capsule of relics from forgotten Bronze Age cities, vanished Roman outposts and other Ozymandian monuments pulled from Syria's sands.

 

Nearby, the lanes of the Old City brimmed with energy. Twilight evoked a certain wistfulness. As the final call to prayer echoed through the blue-black evening, strolling couples and families filled the paved lanes around the mosque. In the cafés, old men in threadbare suits sipped Turkish coffee and chatted.

 

I wiled away more than a few nights, smoking narghiles, as water pipes are called there, and drinking mint tea at the old-world Al Nafoorah coffeehouse - just off the south-east corner of the Umayyad Mosque - as the nightly pageantry of Damascus flowed past. It was the perfect place to meditate on the city.

 

To see the most famous of Syria's crumbling cities, Palmyra, I set out at dawn. The bus rolled across the arid emptiness, past loping camels, goatherds in chequered headdresses, and Bedouin nomads' tents. Finally, three hours later, the majestic, blocky ruins emerged.

 

Here, in Syria's largest oasis, an ancient Silk Road trade centre flourished some two millennia ago. Surveying the landscape then, you would have seen a thriving market city, echoing with talk in Aramaic and filled with arriving camel trains bearing goods such as dried foods, spices, perfume, ivory and silk from as far away as India and China. From Palmyra the exotic goods would be shipped westward to Rome - which for a time controlled Palmyra - where they fetched up to 100 times their original cost.

 

The miles of stony passages and thousands of shops in the souks of Aleppo, another Silk Road stop that's now Syria's second-largest city, briskly destroy flimsy descriptions such as "diverse" or "eclectic". These hollow words splinter under the tonnage of kaftans, coffee beans, lutes, Teletubbies, silk cushions, mosaics, perfumes, gold, carpets, gumdrops and olive-oil soaps.

 

Dodging mule carts and old men chewing pistachios - a local speciality - I moved with the thick crowds past ornate Ottoman-era stone warehouses and the eighth-century Great Mosque, resting place of the head of Zachariah, the father of John the Baptist. Time seemed barely to exist.

 

The stone arches, massive wooden portals and iron-barred windows appeared unchanged since their construction in the Middle Ages.

 

And today, the only real signs of 21st-century life were the schoolgirls sporting Barbie backpacks who were milling about the battlements of the storybook medieval citadel, and the screaming schoolboys fighting unseen invaders.

 

Back in the Old City of Damascus, midnight settled on the Christian Quarter and a slow-moving line of black 4x4s and silver Audis cruised slowly down the Roman-era Straight Street, depositing the well-heeled and the high-heeled at trendy new bars and restaurants tucked in the surrounding labyrinthine lanes.

 

Famous as the place where Saul received his baptism and was christened Paul, "the street called Straight" (as it's referred to in the Bible) and its environs are once again witnessing some astonishing conversions, as young, enterprising Syrians transform old-world buildings into 21st-century clubs, clothes shops and stylish small hotels.

 

"You can see renovation everywhere," said Amjad Malki, a co-owner of the jet-set Villa Moda fashion boutique, as we dined on grilled meats and excellent mezze dishes at the stylish Al-Khawali restaurant. In what was a 17th-century stone stable, Malki's shop has swapped hay and oats for Prada handbags, Jimmy Choo shoes and Dolce & Gabbana leopard-print bikinis.

 

"People are buying and prices have tripled," Malki says, ticking off a list of hotspots such as Leila's Restaurant and the Talisman Hotel in the city. "It's the place to be."

 

Scotsman Magazine travel articles


2007-08-04 13:35:30
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